© The Author(s) 2018. This article discusses the relationships and tensions between the sentencing, statutory supervision and legal rehabilitation of lawbreakers under UK legislation. It does so with reference to both the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974, which allows some criminal records to become ‘spent’ after a set period of time, and the Offender Rehabilitation Act 2014, which was designed to significantly expand statutory supervision arrangements. The article also demonstrates how, post-supervision, many former lawbreakers are cast into a state of ‘civic purgatory’, before suggesting that a more fully integrated approach to rehabilitation is required
Over the last twenty years, research on desistance from crime and on restorative justice has grown r...
This paper explores the difficulties that arise for probation agencies or those that deliver communi...
Introduced under the Transforming Rehabilitation reforms, the Offender Rehabilitation Act 2014 creat...
This article discusses the relationships and tensions between the sentencing, statutory supervision ...
This article considers the variety of theoretical justifications, or moral arguments, which have bee...
Probation has been nurtured and developed for over a century as the key cornerstone of our community...
Last October, I was honoured to provide the Distinguished Scholar address to the ICPA conference in ...
In 2013 the UK government published plans to radically reform resettlement provision for released pr...
Many criminal offenders come from disadvantaged backgrounds, which punishment entrenches. Criminal c...
Rehabilitation programmes are widely offered to offenders in custodial and community settings around...
This article maps the (shifting) boundaries of professional legitimacy, identity and practice in pro...
This article explores governing through rights in a penal context by analyzing a recent case before ...
Moves toward restorative justice have tried to reclaim the resolution of conflicts from the exclusiv...
A lively debate began in the late 1970\u27s on the topic of criminal sentencing. A major attack was ...
One of the most notable developments in social work practice over the past thirty years in England a...
Over the last twenty years, research on desistance from crime and on restorative justice has grown r...
This paper explores the difficulties that arise for probation agencies or those that deliver communi...
Introduced under the Transforming Rehabilitation reforms, the Offender Rehabilitation Act 2014 creat...
This article discusses the relationships and tensions between the sentencing, statutory supervision ...
This article considers the variety of theoretical justifications, or moral arguments, which have bee...
Probation has been nurtured and developed for over a century as the key cornerstone of our community...
Last October, I was honoured to provide the Distinguished Scholar address to the ICPA conference in ...
In 2013 the UK government published plans to radically reform resettlement provision for released pr...
Many criminal offenders come from disadvantaged backgrounds, which punishment entrenches. Criminal c...
Rehabilitation programmes are widely offered to offenders in custodial and community settings around...
This article maps the (shifting) boundaries of professional legitimacy, identity and practice in pro...
This article explores governing through rights in a penal context by analyzing a recent case before ...
Moves toward restorative justice have tried to reclaim the resolution of conflicts from the exclusiv...
A lively debate began in the late 1970\u27s on the topic of criminal sentencing. A major attack was ...
One of the most notable developments in social work practice over the past thirty years in England a...
Over the last twenty years, research on desistance from crime and on restorative justice has grown r...
This paper explores the difficulties that arise for probation agencies or those that deliver communi...
Introduced under the Transforming Rehabilitation reforms, the Offender Rehabilitation Act 2014 creat...